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Silencing of tryptamine biosynthesis for production of nonnatural alkaloids in plant culture

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TLDR
It is shown that RNA mediated suppression of tryptamine biosynthesis in Catharanthus roseus hairy root culture eliminates all production of monoterpene indole alkaloids, a class of natural products derived from two starting substrates, tryptamines and secologanin, which appears to be a viable strategy for programming a plant alkaloid pathway to more effectively produce desirable unnatural products.
Abstract
Natural products have long served as both a source and inspiration for pharmaceuticals. Modifying the structure of a natural product often improves the biological activity of the compound. Metabolic engineering strategies to ferment "unnatural" products have been enormously successful in microbial organisms. However, despite the importance of plant derived natural products, metabolic engineering strategies to yield unnatural products from complex, lengthy plant pathways have not been widely explored. Here, we show that RNA mediated suppression of tryptamine biosynthesis in Catharanthus roseus hairy root culture eliminates all production of monoterpene indole alkaloids, a class of natural products derived from two starting substrates, tryptamine and secologanin. To exploit this chemically silent background, we introduced an unnatural tryptamine analog to the production media and demonstrated that the silenced plant culture could produce a variety of novel products derived from this unnatural starting substrate. The novel alkaloids were not contaminated by the presence of the natural alkaloids normally present in C. roseus. Suppression of tryptamine biosynthesis therefore did not appear to adversely affect expression of downstream biosynthetic enzymes. Targeted suppression of substrate biosynthesis therefore appears to be a viable strategy for programming a plant alkaloid pathway to more effectively produce desirable unnatural products. Moreover, although tryptamine is widely found among plants, this silenced line demonstrates that tryptamine does not play an essential role in growth or development in C. roseus root culture. Silencing the biosynthesis of an early starting substrate enhances our ability to harness the rich diversity of plant based natural products.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Construct design for efficient, effective and high-throughput gene silencing in plants.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined design rules for efficient gene silencing, in terms of both the proportion of independent transgenic plants showing silencing and the degree of silencing.
Journal Article

Construct design for efficient, effective and high-throughput gene silencing in plants

TL;DR: A generic vector is made that allows a simple, single PCR product from a gene of interest to be easily converted into a highly effective ihpRNA silencing construct, and a high-throughput vector that should facilitate the cloning of gene libraries or large numbers of defined genes, such as those in EST collections, using an in vitro recombinase system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Virus resistance and gene silencing in plants can be induced by simultaneous expression of sense and antisense RNA

TL;DR: It is shown that transforming plants with virus or reporter gene constructs that produce RNAs capable of duplex formation confer virus immunity or gene silencing on the plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Role for Flavin Monooxygenase-Like Enzymes in Auxin Biosynthesis

TL;DR: Results from tryptophan analog feeding experiments and biochemical assays indicate that YUCCA catalyzes hydroxylation of the amino group of tryptamine, a rate-limiting step in tryptophile-dependent auxin biosynthesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

ORCA3, a Jasmonate-Responsive Transcriptional Regulator of Plant Primary and Secondary Metabolism

TL;DR: Orca3 overexpression resulted in enhanced expression of several metabolite biosynthetic genes and in increased accumulation of terpenoid indole alkaloids, which may link plant stress responses to changes in metabolism.
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